This week, the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the Department of Interior announced a new effort – the Western Watershed Enhancement Partnership
– to enhance our forests and protect America’s water supply.
This is
important for anyone who pays a water bill, and it’s important for the
future of our environment.
Americans
in our cities depend on clean water at the tap, and our farmers and
ranchers rely on water to irrigate their crops and sustain livestock.
Our public lands are very important in this regard. In fact, our
National Forests and interior lands provide water for more than 60
million Americans.
When
forests are healthy, they filter rain and snowmelt, regulate runoff and
slow soil erosion – delivering clean water at lower cost. But a
changing climate threatens a greater risk for severe wildfires that
release sediment, debris and ash into streams and rivers.
Ultimately,
these impacts of wildfire make it tougher to clean the water at
treatment plants. Water companies are forced to make expensive repairs
to equipment and those costs are passed on to water consumers.
The
Western Watershed Enhancement Partnership will bring together the U.S.
Forest Service, the Department of Interior’s Bureau of Reclamation,
local partners and private water users to restore forest lands in a
proactive way.
By bringing together land and water managers from across
the west, we can increase forest resiliency, improve water quality, and
reduce the risk of catastrophic wildfire. This promises healthier
forests, and savings for water users.
The
new partnership was highlighted recently in President Obama’s Climate
Action Plan – which calls for such proactive measures to protect the
nation’s critical infrastructure and reduce the impacts of a changing
climate.
This week’s announcement also complements USDA’s many other efforts to conserve America’s natural resources. To
ensure strong natural resource conservation in the years to come, USDA
will continue to encourage Congressional passage of a comprehensive
Food, Farm and Jobs Bill. Farmers, landowners and forest owners
need a Food, Farm and Jobs Bill to make effective use of limited
conservation funds, while building on record conservation efforts
underway today.
USDA
is ready to combat the impacts of climate change, and put the
environment on track to a healthy future. We’ll keep working together
with our partners across the country to protect America’s natural
resources – and we will continue to encourage Congress to achieve
passage of a comprehensive Food, Farm and Jobs Bill as soon as possible.
No comments:
Post a Comment